Music Metadata: It’s Here to Stay

On a private mailing list I’m a part of, the issue of music metadata was brought up – specifically, that the Zune desktop and device software relies on metadata for everything, and if you’re the kind of person who has a collection of digital music stretching back 10+ years, there’s a good chance it’s missing proper metadata. Many people have worked around that by organizing and playing back their music like they would a Word document; via the file system. This is a habit that you should seriously consider breaking, and I’ll tell you why.

I’ve seen this complaint a lot over the years running a Zune site, and the reality is that if you have music that’s missing metadata, you’ll have trouble playing it in any modern music player. Everything relies on metadata now, and sooner or later you’re going to have to bite the bullet and tag your music. Yes, it might take hours, weeks, or even months to get it all in shape – but in the end it will be worth it. Doing everything via a file directory structure is a bad habit that we all picked up years ago, but music software has evolved beyond looking at the file names – metadata is so much more powerful and useful.

If you’re in this situation, there’s a free program called MediaMonkey that makes this process much easier – if all your files are named in the same way for instance, you can use a built-in script to automatically insert the metadata into the file based on the file name (Arist – Song) for instance. There are also people who create custom scripts to solve all sorts of automation problems to make tagging easier. It can also look up albums on Amazon.com, automatically correcting track names, embedding album art, and a lot more. The Zune software has tools to adjust metadata, but nothing as powerful as MediaMonkey – I found it so useful I paid for a gold lifetime license because I wanted to thank the developers for creating something so awesome.

If your music collection is in a sad state, lacking metadata, bear down and fix it – you’ll thank me for it later.


Annual Zune Pass: Pay for 10 Months, Get 12 Months

http://zune.net/en-US/products/zune…annualpass.htm#

Like having a Zune Pass? Like saving money? Here’s a no-brainer offer for you then: if you sign up for a year of Zune Pass, you get 12 months worth of goodness for 10 months – and you still get to keep 10 songs a month even if you don’t renew the Zune Pass later on. Nice! Now if only if were available in Canada. Or Germany. Or many of the other countries out there on this planet…


Windows Phone 7 NYC Launch Highlights

I was at the New york City Steve Ballmer keynote for the launch of Windows Phone 7. Class bunked, a 5 hour bus journey starting at 3AM, the day at the event and a 5 hour bus ride back the same day. For a Microsoft enthusiast, the only big news was Copy/Paste coming in 2011, other than that I got to meet a lot of people I’ve been reading for the past few years.

Engadget’s Nilay Patel, Joshua Topolsky and Paul Miller, WinSuperSite’s Paul Thurrott, ZDNet’s Mary Jo Foley, Adam and Brandon from PocketNow, CNet’s Ina Fried and jJhn from Techno Buffalo. As I kept updating the event over twitter, here are some of the highlights of the event:

My picture set:

Hands-on videos of the phones on display:

My favorite phone that I won’t be buying, the HTC HD7:

Click here to view the embedded video.

As to why I won’t be buying, the phone will be available on TMob and several friends have advised me against TMob.

The rest of the HTC line up in one video. The Surround, Trophy and Mozart:

Click here to view the embedded video.

The Samsung Focus, I gotta play NFS Underground on it and it was fun:

Click here to view the embedded video.

AT&T U-Verse and Maps on the LG Quantum:

Click here to view the embedded video.

Dell’s Venue Pro:

Click here to view the embedded video.

I tweeted using most of the handsets I played with taking at least one random picture. Here’s a list:

PS: Thanks to the folks at Zune, I got a one month Zune Pass subscription free which I intend to use once I get my WP7 device. Other then that all the attendees got was a cookie and a card with a URL to the press kit.

Published at: I'm Just Being Manan | Subscribe

Windows Phone 7 NYC Launch Highlights

Windows Phone 7 NYC Launch Highlights

I was at the New york City Steve Ballmer keynote for the launch of Windows Phone 7. Class bunked, a 5 hour bus journey starting at 3AM, the day at the event and a 5 hour bus ride back the same day. For a Microsoft enthusiast, the only big news was Copy/Paste coming in 2011, other than that I got to meet a lot of people I’ve been reading for the past few years.

Engadget’s Nilay Patel, Joshua Topolsky and Paul Miller, WinSuperSite’s Paul Thurrott, ZDNet’s Mary Jo Foley, Adam and Brandon from PocketNow, CNet’s Ina Fried and jJhn from Techno Buffalo. As I kept updating the event over twitter, here are some of the highlights of the event:

My picture set:

Hands-on videos of the phones on display:

My favorite phone that I won’t be buying, the HTC HD7:

Click here to view the embedded video.

As to why I won’t be buying, the phone will be available on TMob and several friends have advised me against TMob.

The rest of the HTC line up in one video. The Surround, Trophy and Mozart:

Click here to view the embedded video.

The Samsung Focus, I gotta play NFS Underground on it and it was fun:

Click here to view the embedded video.

AT&T U-Verse and Maps on the LG Quantum:

Click here to view the embedded video.

Dell’s Venue Pro:

Click here to view the embedded video.

I tweeted using most of the handsets I played with taking at least one random picture. Here’s a list:

PS: Thanks to the folks at Zune, I got a one month Zune Pass subscription free which I intend to use once I get my WP7 device. Other then that all the attendees got was a cookie and a card with a URL to the press kit.

Published at: I'm Just Being Manan | Subscribe

Windows Phone 7 NYC Launch Highlights

Zune 4.7 + Windows Phone 7 Video Overview

http://www.engadget.com/2010/10/11/…ught-on-camera/

Curious about how the new Zune 4.7 software works with Windows Phone 7? Check out the Engadget hands-on video above.


Encoding Video For Your Mobile Devices

http://lifehacker.com/5653287/how-t…-mobile-devices

“With H.264 solidly planted as the codec of choice for just about every mobile device, we’ve come to a point where you can encode a video once and play it back on pretty much anything”

LifeHacker has an article that shows you how to encode video for the many mobile devices you have. The newer they are the more likely they are to support H.264, including Windows Phone 7 and all Zunes back to the original Zune 30. That makes it easy as you just have to encode for one format that is almost universal. If you have Windows Mobile 6.x, you may have H.264 support through the video apps provided by your carrier or handset maker. If not, check out CorePlayer.


Zune HD Hacked – Good News for Windows Phone 7?

zune_hd_family

I just read over on Engadget that some folks over at ZuneBoards have announced that the Zune HD – and all its predecessors – have been hacked open!

The Zunes have been pried open before, but not to this full extent. According to ZuneBoards, this hack gives developers access to “everything XNA withheld before”, meaning any application that can run on Zune hardware… games, apps, emulators, anything.

This might have implications for Windows Phone 7 when it is released later this year, says WMExperts, as Windows Phone 7 is also a closed environment like the Zune. With this new Zune hack, which allows for limitless side-loading of apps from any source at all, are we looking at the possibility of the same work-around on Windows Phone 7?

[via]

Video Walkthrough of Windows Phone 7 Zune Software

This little video walkthrough explains the Zune music component of Windows Phone 7 OS. For anyone who has been trying to make do with the built-in Windows Media Player for WM 6.x or even the aftermarket apps like PocketMusic, this video should spell welcome relief!

Goodbye Windows Mobile, Hello Windows Phone 7 Series

Microsoft officially launched Windows Phone 7 Series (previously referred to as Windows Mobile 7, Windows Phone 7, or even Photon) on Monday, dropping the gauntlet on what will shape up to be a mighty mobile battle come Christmas.

A whole new OS

Windows Phone 7 Series Phones, as the new devices will be officially known (yikes), will be a complete departure from the Windows Mobile devices we are all familiar with and feature a brand-new, possibly revolutionary UI. The Start menu? Gone. Touch elements designed for six-year-old fingers? Gone. In fact, Microsoft’s new OS is aiming to change the mobile phone paradigm by shifting away from an app-centric model to an experience or task-based system that groups your personal data, social networking streams, location-based services, and media sources into what Microsoft calls ‘hubs’ (more later)

Reflecting their determination to re-define the relationship between end-user and their phone, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer announced at the Barcelona 2010 Mobile World Congress:

“In a crowded market, filled with phones that look the same and do the same things, I challenged the team to deliver a different kind of mobile experience. Windows Phone 7 marks a turning point toward phones that truly relfect the speed of people’s lives and their need to connect to other people and all kinds of seamless experiences.”

Joe Belfiore, vice president of Windows Phone, said it was time to stop thinking about mobile phones like PCs:

“A phone is not a PC, it’s a smaller, more intimate device,” he said. “Too many phones are made to look like PCs. We wanted to come up with a user design that was different, that moved beyond the metaphor of the PC.”

Live Tiles

windows_phone_7_live_tiles This ain’t your daddy’s Windows Phone. Microsoft has taken advantage of the fact that it is so late with this product to properly think out how people use their mobile devices. They have no doubt heard for years now about how un-finger-friendly Windows Mobile is and how counter-intuitive it can seem compared to its competition. They’ve seen people complain about icon overload and the app-to-app routine on the iPhone (one app for Facebook, one app for twittering, one app for YouTube, etc); The result? Live Tiles.

The new home screen on WP7 devices will consist of several vertically-scrollable live tiles. The main screen shows 5 live tiles: Internet Explorer, Phone, Text, People. Each of these boxes is “live” and auto-updates with real-time information from all of your various info sources. So when your friend updates his Facebook page, that update shows on the Friends tile. If you miss a phone call, the Phone tile updates to show the number of missed calls, and your most recent photos fade in and out in the Pictures tile.

Hubs

windows_phone_7_people_hub Clicking on any of these main live tiles will bring up the corresponding Hub. There are a bunch of default hubs that will ship with WP7: People, Games, Xbox Live, Pictures, Music & Video (with support for more than just Zune accounts), Zune, Office (with support for multiple exchange accounts), and of course the Marketplace. These hubs pull in data from all of your various sources and present it in a task-oriented manner, rather than using a separate app for each service you use.

For example, the above pic shows the People hub. The first screen you will see when you click on the People tile is the ‘Recent’ screen. Scrolling right will give you all of your peeps, scrolling right again will show you the What’s New tab, which lists all of your friends’ most recent social media updates,

Similarly, when you tap on the Music and Video tile, up pops the Zune menu. Scrolling to the right brings up your History, continuing to scroll brings up the “What’s New” tab, and then Apps that are music or video related. Hubs create an easy way to browse all of your data – both on-device and online – by topic or experience. Very cool.

windows_phone_7_music_and_video_hub X-Box and Zune Integration

While Microsoft’s mobile lately may have missed the mark, they have had remarkable success with their X-Box and Zune line. The X-Box model has been a decade in the making and Microsoft has earned a very respectable share of a competitive market – something it needs to do with WP7. The Zune HD was released last year to terrific reviews and great critical, if not commercial, success.

Microsoft is finally taking advantage of these successful platforms and fully integrating X-Box Live and Zune with Windows Phone 7 Series devices. Mobile gaming might be limited initially, but expect this to be a major component and battle ground in the coming year or two, and Microsoft (for once) has a clear advantage over rivals like Palm and Apple here.

As for Zune integration, you can almost thank the Zune for the new UI. Internally at Microsoft, the UI for the Zune HD was referred to as Metro; the same name they use to discuss the Windows Phone 7 Series interface. Beyond that, expect to see complete integration with the Zune service and any Zunes you might have lying around.

Manufacturers and Carriers

Just as with Windows Mobile, Microsoft has lined up a top-notch list of manufactures who are eager to start putting out Windows Phone 7 Series devices. The list includes longtime Windows Mobile supporters HTC, LG, Samsung and Toshiba, as well as Garmin-Asus, on-the-fence Sony Ericsson, and even Dell.

Unlike with Windows Mobile, however, and this is absolutely critical, Microsoft has imposed a Chassis requirement for all WP7 devices. This means that all WP7 phones will need have a minimum hardware spec that – so far – includes several mandatory hardware buttons (home, search and back), CPU and screen size/resolution requirements, plus an accelerometer, GPS, camera and other goodies.

This Chassis system should help maintain a good user experience and avoid manufacturers putting out shoddy hardware that gives Windows Phone 7 devices a bad rap.

Carriers will include all of the Big Four US carriers: AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile and Verizon – as well as Deutsche Telekom, Orange, SFR, Telecom Italia, Telefonica, Telstra, and Vodafone. Rogers and Telus haven’t made any comment yet.

WP7: Do or Die for Microsoft

By most accounts, it’s do or die time for Microsoft. For whatever reason, most likely because they simply underestimated the growth of the smartphone/mobile market, Microsoft hasn’t taken the mobile space very seriously for the past four or five years… despite being one of the first out of the gate.

By the time the first Windows Phone 7 Series device hits the market, we’ll be looking at a new iPhone, a new version of Google’s Android, and an updated webOS from Palm… very serious competition for Windows Phones. If Microsoft blunders, they might just miss the last train out of the desktop station.

No Decent Gaming in Windows Mobile 7

xbox_360_logo

Edward at msmobiles.com, generally a very reliable and informed source on all things Microsoft, has just recently posted that he doesn’t think the next version of Windows Mobile, version 7, will have any major gaming features. There had been plenty of rumors, and maybe a little wishful thinking, that Microsoft would be putting some serious gaming clout into the upcoming release of Windows Mobile, but a source of Edward’s thinks otherwise:

(Microsoft has moved many top executives and engineers over to a new team designed to compete more effectively with Apple’s iPhone). One problem: I’m hearing from employees who work inside these teams that the political will to really develop a good Xbox-playing smartphone isn’t there. If that’s true, look for Microsoft to remain shut out of the battlefield and to remain a loser in the mobile space.

This quote comes from a former ‘softie blogger who has friends on the Windows Mobile 7 team inside MS.

Like Edward, I find this pretty frustrating, especially since they have such a hot, networkable device in the x-box. It’s great that Microsoft is merging their Zune services into Windows Mobile (a couple years late) and the new UI is going to be slick, but with Apple about to drop their new iPhone and Android nipping at their heels (and about to pass), Microsoft needs to realize they may be out of the game already by the time Windows Mobile 7 actually hits the market.

Zune Software Coming in Windows Mobile 7?

steve_ballmer_microsoftIn a recent chat with Engadget, Steve Ballmer seems to confirm that the next version of Windows Mobile, Windows Mobile 7, is going to have the Zune software fully integrated. That’s wicked, and speculation is that it means the end of Windows Media Player on the Windows Mobile platform. It is further evidence of Microsoft’s efforts to merge or at least blur the lines between their major platforms. Good news all around.

More X-Box/Windows Mobile 7 Convergence?

xbox_360_logo

MobileTechWorld put up a post that hints at the future of gaming on Windows Mobile 7 and how that might merge with the X-Box world.

Two job postings are out from Microsoft that are of interest to those of us who would like to see a more concerted and coordinated effort from Microsoft across its platforms:

The first is a “Developer Account Manager“, whose job it will be to:

to own and drive the relationship with our top mobile entertainment development partners. You will work closely with ourWindows Mobile and Xbox LIVE platform teams

This makes it sound like this particular account manager position looks like they will be working on both Windows Mobile and X-Box Live games… does that mean there will be releases that run on both platforms?

The second is less exciting on the convergence front, but cool nonetheless: a 3rd party account manager who will act as the “day-to-day contact for publishers” and will be responsible for landing exclusive games for Windows Mobile.

Both of these postings bode well for Microsoft’s secret attempt to have cross-platform integration between their X-Box, Zune and Windows Phone services and platforms.

Ballmer Says Zune HD Software Coming to Windows Mobile

microsoft_zune_music_streamIn a recent interview with CNet, Steve Ballmer seems to confirm that we’ll see Zune HD software coming to Windows Phones:

What is Zune HD? Zune HD is a couple things. Number one, Zune HD is a music player with a nice music service. By the way, the same software will be available on Windows Phones and Windows PCs. You have that today on the PC, you’ll see that in our phone environment as well.

This is huge clue to the future of Microsoft’s service offerings. It has been rumored for a while, or perhaps heavily suggested by pundits and critics alike (including this one), that Microsoft should be pushing for mega-integration among their various platforms, and I think we’re starting to see that happen.

Marketplace and Zune service start to merge as there is less distinction between the Zune and Windows Phone architecture (see the Pink chassis). Zune services coming to X-Box, Zune service on Windows Mobile… all part of a long-term strategy to pull their constituents together…

Another Microsoft Tablet PC Prototype: Codex

microsoft_codex_tablet_pc_screenshot1
Hot on the heels of the Microsoft Courier tablet pc video comes this second round of Microsoft tablet pc pics, this time on one called Codex. Perhaps destined to be Courier v.1, the Codex looks like it is designed to work like a traditional filofax or organizer, but with Windows 7 powering everything between the leather covers.

The Microsoft Codex features two 4.6″ touchscreens that can be positioned in any number of ways. Like the Microsoft Courier, it relies heavily on InkSeine, which is looking like a the byproduct of Microsoft OneNote and Journal and a lot of steroids.

more…

Zune phone appears to be unlikely

In case you’re still holding your breath for a Zune Phone, you might also want to cut a flap in the back of your pants to let the monkeys fly out. It doesn’t look likely, folks. Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer has said that the Zune Phone is a no-go as he feels that the market for portable media devices is slowly fading out and that he sees it being replaced by multi-purpose devices. Okay, Steve, no Zune with phone capabilities… but what about a phone with Zune capabilities? Apparently that’s more likely.

I just recently got a 120GB Zune. Do I wish it could make phone calls? Nah. I’m far too impressed with everything else it can do to care. I have a phone. And a Zune.

Do you agree with Ballmer? Do you thing portable media is on its way out?

[via]

Is Microsoft building a Tegra-based smartphone?

According to some rumours started by the Inquirer today (ignore their linked ‘video proof’ as it’s clearly a joke), Microsoft is in the final stages of building a phone – the first of its own brand – that will rely on performance to drive sales. They’re allegedly developing a phone that uses one of NVIDIA’s Tegra processors. This processor (likely the APX 2500 chip) would theoretically give the Microsoft device 720p video playback and advanced 3D visuals that no other smartphone on the market has, to date.

More about the Microsoft smartphone rumours here

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